Portrait of a bookstore as an Old Man Beginning
In 1951, George Whitman opened a bookshop-commune in Paris. George, 92, still runs his “den of anarchists disguised as a bookstore,” offering free, dirty beds to poor literati, cutting his hair with a candle and gluing the carpet with pancake batter. More than 40,000 poets, travelers and political activists have stayed at Shakespeare and Company, writing or stealing books, throwing parties and making soup or love while living with George’s generosity and fits of anger. Illustrious guests include Henry Miller, Anaïs Nin, Jacques Prévert, Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs, Gregory Corso, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, James Baldwin and Richard Wright. Welcome to the makeshift utopia of the last member of the Beat Generation.
Whitman passed away last December at the age of 98.
Watch the whole documentary on YouTube here:
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL68F1D98D4F87B4C6&feature=plcpOr Watch on Google Video here:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5574284408427118756
via beauvoiriana:
Simone de Beauvoir signing books.
This photo is the cover of the French edition of the second volume of Force of Circumstance (1972). Curious detail: on the right, someone asks her to autograph Troubled Sleep (in Portuguese) by her long term romantic partner Jean-Paul Sartre.